With both camps expected to rotate and the stakes more emotional than competitive, this bronze-medal shootout is shaping up as a game where individual battles and open football matter more than the final scoreline.

Here's a three-leg bet builder built around that idea, priced at 13/2 with BetMGM.

Leg 1: Jude Bellingham to commit 2+ fouls

Bellingham's disciplinary record makes uncomfortable reading for England fans - nine yellow cards across his last 33 appearances works out to roughly one every three-and-a-half games, and his tackling has only grown more combative. He's racked up multiple fouls in three of his last seven outings and gone the full match without one just twice in that span, and his temperament looked frayed even after the final whistle against Argentina, when he was pictured in an ill-tempered exchange with Valentin Barco. Facing France's midfield battlers Manu Kone and Adrien Rabiot, two of the more combative operators left in the tournament, there's every chance Bellingham's frustration boils over again.

Jude Bellingham Fouls Committed: 3, 1, 1, 2, 0, 2, 0,

Leg 2: Maxence Lacroix to commit 2+ fouls

William Saliba's back injury opens the door for Crystal Palace's Maxence Lacroix, who has already logged minutes this tournament - coming on for the injured Saliba in the semi-final and starting the group-stage win over Norway.

In both appearances he was whistled for a foul twice, and that pattern lines up with his club form: Lacroix committed close to 34 fouls across 35 Premier League appearances for Palace last season.

Deschamps has generally favoured combative centre-backs - Dayot Upamecano has fouled in the majority of his matches this tournament, and Saliba himself averaged more than one foul a game across his knockout-stage starts - so there's little reason to expect Lacroix to play it any differently on his first World Cup start at this level.

Up against England's tricky forwards he can pick up a couple fouls.

Leg 3: Both Teams to Score

Dead-rubber fixtures tend to loosen both defences up, and neither side has much incentive to prioritise a clean sheet here. England's knockout run has been the definition of end-to-end: all four of their knockout matches so far have seen goals at both ends, and their only shutouts of the tournament came in low-key group games against Panama and Ghana. With England's attack still firing and France likely to field enough quality going forward regardless of rotation, goals at both ends look the likely outcome.